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Ya’alon: Crisis management, not peace

Category: Featured Headlines, Israel

Source: Jerusalem Post

Lt.-Gen. (res.) Moshe Ya’alon called on Tuesday for an overhaul of the two-state solution that has been the basic premise of a diplomatic solution since the beginning of the Oslo process in 1993.

In a session at the Herzliya Conference entitled “Negotiating the final status agreement,” Ya’alon said a brand new paradigm was needed, one that called for long-term crisis management rather than finding a short-term solution, which he said was currently impossible to reach.

The former IDF chief of General Staff, now a senior fellow at the Shalem Center’s Adelson Institute for Strategic Studies, said history has proven that the Arabs have not come to terms with Israel’s existence here in any form. He said that Yasser Arafat’s decision to start a terrorist war against Israel in September 2000 while on the verge of gaining a state along the 1967 lines was done “to avoid a two-state solution that would entail de facto recognition of Israel as an independent Jewish state.”

Oslo presumed that a diplomatic solution and economic development would create peace, and peace would bring security, Ya’alon said, saying that this paradigm simply did not work.

He said that a new concept needed to be created that was based on fundamental reform of Palestinian society in the following spheres: education, law and order, security, economy and governance. He said that Palestinians needed to prove that they could rule responsibly according to the principle of “one authority, one gun, and one law.”

While Ya’alon said that the Oslo premises needed to be ditched, former ambassador Daniel Kurtzer, one of its proponents, cautioned against “disposing of the peace process.” Rather, he said, there was a need to take the given situation and “try to make it work.”

Kurtzer, today a professor at Princeton University, said that one of the problems of the Oslo process was a lack of accountability and a mechanism “to monitor the parties and hold them accountable.” The US, he said, could have played this role, but did not.

As part of the Annapolis process US President George. W. Bush has, however, recently set up a mechanism, to be led by General William Frazier, explicitly for this purpose.

Mofaz: Likelihood of attack on Iran increasing

Transportation minister and also former IDF chief of staff Shaul Mofaz hinted that the likelihood of a preemptive attack on Iran is increasing. “The diplomatic efforts are failing”, said Mofaz, “and so the possibility of a military option is growing.”

In his special address at the Hertzelia conference, Mofaz also said that the Iranian train was “an express train”, and said that the nuclear program was for Iran only “means to the cause of becoming an Islamic superpower.”

“We have two years to stop Iran before it’s too late”, added Mofaz.

Former White House adviser sees gap with Israel in communication, not policy

Is there American pressure on Israel limiting its options regarding the peace process or military decisions? According to a former Middle East advisor to Vice President Dick Cheney, there isn’t any pressure - just bad communication.

“We hear often that Israel has to pursue policy because it’s under pressure from the American president, our closest friend. Is that true?” asked former MK Natan Sharansky, introducing the former advisor, Dr. David Wurmser, at lunch at the Herzliya Conference.

Wurmser: “I would have been very surprised if prime minister Sharon or Olmert had said to the president, ‘We have a vital interest to protect,’ and the president would refuse. I never saw a moment like that.”

Wurmser admitted “there are some voices in Washington” that want to pressure Israel, but not at the political level.

Indeed, said Wurmser, during the Second Lebanon War “we acted deliberately to give Israel space. For me, it is unimaginable that in a supposed expansion of an Israeli war against Hizbullah” - such as Israel attacking Hizbullah’s supply chain in Syria - “we would suddenly turn neutral. There seems to be a gap between Washington and Jerusalem, not on values, but in communication.”

Sweden: Iranian nuke “can’t be stopped militarily”

“A military option doesn’t exist. You can only delay” Iranian nuclear armament through military means, according to Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt, speaking to journalists Tuesday on the sidelines of the Herzliya Conference.

Asked if the world could live with a nuclear Iran, he replied with the question, “Can you stop it? The only way we can be certain of succeeding is an agreement with Iran that’s verifiable. Military options won’t do the trick.”

Bildt also spoke of the Annapolis process, which he believes is the best possibility for peace between Israel and the Palestinians to date.

“There are three factors now that we haven’t seen before,” he explained. “There is an Israeli prime minister who said there’s a partner for peace, the active involvement of the world seen at the Paris donors’ conference, and suddenly the active involvement of the United States.”

According to Bildt, the world sees a “virtual collapse of the Gazan economy” with recent Israeli cuts to the strip’s fuel supply. He warned that “Israel will be seen in the eyes of the world as responsible for a humanitarian disaster.” Even if Israel tries to end its responsibility for the Gaza Strip, “you can’t get rid of responsibility for access” to the Strip, Bildt said.

Source: Jerusalem Post

6 Responses »

  1. I dont support the two state option. The people who call themselves palestinians should get their citizenship to Jordan or Syria or become Israeli citizens. Israel should keep all the lands taken in 67 including the west bank and Golan heights. These are the original biblical lands of the Jews and have many of the Jewish and Christian holy sites which should be guarded and fought for by the Christians and the jews.

    Also, i was pleased to read that the people of Gaza had knocked down the barrier to Egypt. Let the people return to Egypt where they came from. Egypt has sent militants to Gaza over the years to make trouble for Israel. Now let Egypt take care of its puppet state and the people it has used as pawns against Israel

    Tasha Withers

  2. What is it with these so called diplomats who seem to be incapable of seeing when diplomacy does not, will not and has not worked, and unfortunately, strong arm methods are the only altenative left.
    Why don’t they move the so called ‘Palestinian refugees’ and put them in either Syria or Iraq (or Iran or eastern Jordan or northern Lebanon or whatever) where they have plenty of unused space for the rabbit like breeding that is taking place.
    They will then have plenty of space to expand and develope into a viable group of people who can teach their children how to grow up without guns and explosives into useful citizens who can take care of themselves without the aid of that useless bunch, the UN!!!

  3. What is it with Sweden? They have lived in the cold for so long that they talk ice cubes!! The three factors he talks about are a load of rubbish - giving away a portion of your capital City, the active (how?) involvement of a conference hundreds of miles away by people who will not get their hands dirty by actually doing something concrete, and the USA has been involved for years! It’s just that this time they are being wishy-washy enough to appeal to the Swedish line of thought.
    ‘Joe Public’ in the rest of the world understands the situation far better than the politicians give him credit for, and he will understand why, not blame, Israel’s fuel cuts, and he also knows that the resposibility for the humanitarian problem is solely in the hands of Arafat/Hamas/Iran/Hebollah et al!!!!

  4. Let the Palistines live with the Arabs some where, not in Isreal. God gave Isreal to the Jew. Period…

  5. As I understand the situation, the Palestinians have only themselves to blame and not Israel, for their current
    dilemma!

  6. Nice Site! Thanks!

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